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40.This advice being liked, they sent a messenger and the market was furnished.And the Syracusians suddenly rowed astern towards the city, and disbarking, dined there right on the shore.
[2]
The Athenians, supposing they had retired towards the city as vanquished, landed at leisure, and amongst other business went about the dressing of their dinner, as not expecting to have fought again the same day.But the Syracusians, suddenly going aboard, came towards them again;
[3]
and the Athenians, in great tumult and for the most part undined, embarking disorderly, at length with much ado went out to meet them.For a while they held their hands on both sides and but observed each other.
[4]
But anon after, the Athenians thought not fit by longer dallying to overcome themselves with their own labour, but rather to fight as soon as they could, and thereupon at once with a joint shout charged the enemy, and the fight began.
[5]
The Syracusians received [and resisted] their charge, and fighting, as they had before determined, with their galleys head to head with those of the Athenians, and provided with beaks for the purpose, brake the galleys of the Athenians very much between the heads of the galleys and the oars.The Athenians were also annoyed much by the darters from the decks, but much more by those Syracusians who, going about in small boats, passed under the rows of the oars of the enemy's galleys, and coming close to their sides, threw their darts at the mariners from thence.

The English works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury. Thucydides. Thomas Hobbes. translator. London. Bohn. 1843.

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